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The End of the War Ludendorff Offensives Ferdinand Foch AEF Armistice

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Presentation on theme: "The End of the War Ludendorff Offensives Ferdinand Foch AEF Armistice"— Presentation transcript:

1 The End of the War Ludendorff Offensives Ferdinand Foch AEF Armistice
Paris Peace Conference

2 Ludendorff Offensives
Uses storm troop tactics Goal is to divide French and British armies and open a gap 1,200 square miles in two weeks Germans cross Somme and Chemin des Dames with ease Paris evacuated

3 Stormtroop Tactics

4 Britain: 58 divisions Germany: 199 divisions Lys 9-29 April Somme: 21 Mar-4 June Amiens Aisne: 27 May – 4 June Noyon: 8-12 June France: 100 divisions Marne: 15-17 July USA: six divisions Paris

5 Allied Response Joint command needed Pétain or Foch?
Doullens Agreement (March 26, 1918) Gives Foch power to “coordinate the actions of the allied armies” Creation of the General Reserve

6 The Americans Willing to serve under Foch’s overall direction, and will place US divisions into French corps, but will NOT permanently amalgamate Goal is still a separate US Army with its own sphere of action Abbeville Agreement of May 2 US sends six divisions in May and agrees to send 450,000 men by July The American people would consider it a great honor for our troops to be engaged in the present battle Infantry, artillery, aviation, all that we have is yours; use them as you wish – Pershing to Foch

7 Amiens Second Marne Argonne Forest St. Mihiel

8 Armistice German decision to seek armistice on Nov 7 broadcast to Eiffel Tower radio station Ludendorff fled to Sweden, Kaiser abdicated to Holland Who is in charge? Matthias Erzberger, told by Hindenburg to “sign a peace at any cost.”

9 Meeting at Compiègne

10 Armistice Terms Germany evacuates all occupied territory (including Alsace and Lorraine) without damaging civilian and military equipment contained therein. Germany surrenders: 5,000 heavy guns; 30,000 machine guns; 5,000 locomotives; 150,000 railway cars; 150 submarines. Blockade of Germany continues until the conclusion of a final peace treaty.

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